Summary and Conclusions

The data collected in this study show that the submarine ground-water-flow
paths at Cape Cod National Seashore are more complicated than expected.
Results of CRP surveys show areas both in estuaries and along open Atlantic
Ocean shorelines where submarine ground water of reduced salinity is present.
The geometry of resistivity anomalies suggests that there are connections
between submarine anomalies and onshore flow systems. Specific areas where
features indicating the presence of low-salinity ground water are present
include part of Pleasant Bay in Chatham, the ocean shoreline along the
bluffs north of Nauset Marsh adjacent to Eastham and Wellfleet, areas
beneath Nauset Marsh including Salt Pond Bay, and areas beneath Salt Pond
and the channel connecting the pond to the open marsh. The deeper part
of the pond itself does not appear to be an area of active discharge.
Shallow anomalies around the shore of the pond and beneath the channel
are consistent with active discharge of submarine ground water in these
locations. Such discharge is also likely in similar settings.

Data collected by EC probing, piezometer sampling, and vibracoring are
all consistent with the CRP data in the areas investigated, but produce
information on subsurface conditions with greater resolution, especially
in the vertical dimension. Analytical data (Figures 12a
and 12b)
show that submarine ground water is enriched in nutrients relative to
background concentrations, especially in ammonium, although an elevated
nitrate/nitrite concentration was measured in a deep sample collected
at the location closest to the northern shore of Salt Pond. Ammonium concentrations
(Figure
12a) tend to be highest in the most saline ground water. Total dissolved
nitrogen (TDN) results indicate that dissolved organic nitrogen is present
at high concentrations in some samples, often but not always in association
with elevated ammonium concentrations. Results for phosphorus species
(phosphate and total dissolved phosphorus, Figure
12b) are most similar to ammonium patterns, with the highest concentrations
in brackish to saline samples. Total dissolved phosphorus (TDP) analyses
show that phosphorus in most of the ground water is in the inorganic form,
except in some of the samples with higher concentrations (about a third
of the total analyzed).

Fine-grained lacustrine and estuarine deposits in Salt Pond and Salt
Pond Bay act as confining units, allowing low-salinity ground water to
flow beneath them for hundreds of meters before discharging. The patterns
of submarine flow and discharge observed in the Salt Pond-Nauset Marsh
system are likely common in other similar settings on Cape Cod, and along
other coastlines formed by glacial processes and subsequent sea-level
rise.